"60 Minutes" will rebroadcast its 2006 interview with the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, in which the Oscar-winning actor spoke candidly about his problems with addiction.

The interview, conducted by Steve Kroft, will be re-edited to include previously unbroadcast material, including more from the actor about the rehabilitation he underwent as a young man that he credited with saving his life at the time.

The re-edited story will be broadcast Feb. 9 at 7 PM ET on CBS.

In the original interview, Hoffman told Kroft he was fresh out of New York University’s drama school when he was lured into New York City’s fast life. "It was all that [drugs and alcohol], yeah, it was anything I could get my hands on…I liked it all," he said. But he saw the need to change early. "I went [to rehab], I got sober when I was 22 years old," said the then-38-year-old Oscar nominee. "You get panicked…and I got panicked for my life," said Hoffman. "It really was just that." He won the Oscar for Best Actor that year for his portrayal of Truman Capote.